Creating a Facebook group has changed over the years, but at the time of this post, a group has the following attributes.

– A group is set up by a creator

– It can be a public group or private group

– If the group is private, you can require perspective members to request access

– If the group is public, anyone can join.

The image below was posted in a group called “iPhone Groupies,” that as of 12/15/12 at 10:08am has 83 members. This was posted in the group 17 hours prior to that time and only 10 people have seen it.

Don’t be fooled by the number 10, although this post in the group “iPhone Groupies” was seen by 10, that does not mean that they read it or engaged with it. That just means that this post appeared in the newsfeeds of 10 people.

Upon initial setup, the default setting in a group is that notifications will be turned on. Which means that anytime someone posts in this group, members will receive a notification.

If you are posting everyday, those alerts are seemingly going to annoy your audience. Group members may not know this, but they have options when it comes managing their alerts.

Keep in mind these settings are intended to be used by individual users and are not settings for the entire group. Facebook groups are not suggested for managing your brand as the only analytics you can measure are how many have seen the post, not engagement rate, virility and reach.

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